More than 50 people braved the winter cold and dark to spend Friday night on the campus of Columbia University brainstorming for a bicoastal datafest that gets underway there and on the campus of Stanford University today.

The Friday night event consisted of what one of our partners, Stanford journalism professor Ann Grimes, describes as "speed data-ing." Participants presented ideas and sought partners with expertise they need to accomplish their projects -- or at least get them started this weekend. One Columbia j-school applicant wants to research the connections between private prison companies and the politicians who hire them. A Princeton masters degree candidate suggested using Benford's law to detect crude fraud by local officials and sought assistance in one area. "If anyone loves writing in English, we could do well together," he said.

A Columbia journalism school student from Australia said he has already recruited help at the Stanford campus for a project that will take a look at Washington policy makers' financial portfolios and analyze how their holdings affect decision making.

You can find some of the other project ideas here. The real work gets underway today when participants show up at Columbia and Stanford. Both schools will be live-streaming some of the speakers, including Steve Engleberg, editor in chief of Pro Publica and Robert Rosenthal of the Center for Investigative Reporting. More information about how to watch is here.

The bicoastal datafest was conceived by Teresa Bouza of the global news agency EFE and is being sponsored by the Sunlight Foundation, the journalism programs of Stanford University and Columbia University and the Brown Institute of Media Innovation with major funding from the MacArthur Foundation.